WebProNews

Tag: Holidays

  • Tina Fey On Holidays And Body Hair

    Tina Fey is not one to shy away from disclosing her true feelings on an issue, whether that would be comedy, life or body hair.

    The latter being the most important, of course.

    To Tina Fey, body hair should be left alone until it becomes an absolute necessity to address.

    Tina Fey recently opened up about the issue, saying, “Remove your body hair only when necessary.”

    She added, “Body hair is a constant annoyance. Mostly I just let it be. Until I have to go into a professional situation, and then I have to shave from head to toe.”

    That’s also called summer, right?

    Tina Fey also talked about coping with average looks as a teenager.

    She said, “For me it was about hitting age 13 and realizing, ‘OK, I’m not going to glide by on looks. I’m a normal-looking person, but that’s not going to be where my bread is buttered.’”

    She added, “The desire to be funny — because you are never actually quite sure if you really are funny — is a coping mechanism, another way of ingratiating yourself.”

    The holiday season can also be a struggle for Tina Fey, who has two young girls at home. It seems her Christmas decorating history was tinged with stress from her father’s micromanagement of the tree.

    But, Tina Fey is working on it. Aren’t we all trying to be less stressed this season? And aren’t most of us failing terribly?

    It’s okay, Tina Fey.

    She said, “I remember looking forward to it so much, and then realizing it was so much stress. My dad had very rigid rules on how Christmas worked. The tree did not go up until Christmas Eve and it had to be decorated with lights first, then balls, then figurines, then tinsel.”

    She then admitted, “But, I have caught myself doing that with my children, you can’t let it go: ‘You can’t put the Mickey Mouse on the tree, we haven’t done the red balls yet. Son of a b**ch.’”

    Haha! Oh the struggles joys of having kids at Christmas!

    Can you relate to Tina Fey’s very real issues?

  • Yelp Analyzes Calls Made to Businesses On Holidays

    Yelp shared some new findings about the calls people to make to businesses during the holiday season. It says consumers call businesses more than a thousand times on holidays.

    Specifically, the company looked at calls made to businesses surrounding Thanksgiving and Christmas last year. Calls to businesses in the nightlife category increased by 272% on Thanksgiving Day and 393% on Christmas Day.

    “It’s clear that Yelpers are looking to shake the holiday stress away (and searching for something a bit stronger than eggnog,” says Yelp’s Katrina Hafford. “You can only listen to little Timmy’s rendition of ‘Jingle Bell Rock’ for so long before it’s time to seek outside entertainment.”

    According to Yelp, calls to businesses in the Arts & Entertainment category increased by 158% on Thanksgiving Day and 291% on Christmas Day. Businesses in the Active Life category saw calls increase by 165% on Thanksgiving Day and 153% on Christmas Day.

    Calls in the Restaurant category increased by 428% and those in the Shopping category increased by 212% on Christmas Day. Calls to restaurants only increased by 1% the week after Thanksgiving.

    Image via Yelp

  • Salesforce Infographic Looks at Holiday Marketing Trends

    Salesforce Infographic Looks at Holiday Marketing Trends

    Another day, another interesting infographic from Salesforce.

    Earlier this week, we looked at one the company released about the state of customer service based on its new 2015 State of Service Report.

    This one looks at holiday marketing and how to sell more stuff.

    “Digital influencers are more important than ever before,” says Salesforce’s Lauren Jung. “With approximately 200M people using ad blockers, it’s time to move on! The majority of customers want brands to be less intrusive, so the best thing you can do is partner up with a trusted advocate in your industry to drive your message home to a targeted audience.”

    “If your product is visual in nature, user-generated content is huge for sales,” Jung adds. “Customers are a lot more likely to buy something from you if they’ve seen a piece of user-generated content through a social network. Instagram is a great vehicle for that. ”

    Image via Salesforce

  • Amazon Claims Record Weekend For Its Devices

    Amazon Claims Record Weekend For Its Devices

    Amazon says it had a record holiday shopping weekend for sales of its devices. While the company didn’t reveal any hard numbers, it says it sold “millions of devices” and 3x over last year.

    The top-selling products across all of the products available on Amazon.com on Black Friday were Amazon devices. #1 was Fire and #2 was Fire TV Stick. Of course it probably helps that the company recently removed the competition from its site.

    Amazon Fire TV sales were up more than 6x year over year for the holiday shopping weekend, the company says, noting that from July through October (the last month for which there is data) Fire TV has been the top streaming media player in the US, across all retailers.

    On Black Friday, Amazon Echo was the top seller across all $100+ products on Amazon.com, according to the company. The new $49.99 Fire tablet is the fastest-selling Amazon tablet ever, with millions sold since launch, it says. Amazon sold “hundreds of thousands” of Kindle e-readers over the weekend.

    “We’re excited that millions of customers will be opening new Amazon devices this holiday season. This has already been the biggest holiday shopping season for Amazon devices, and we’re energized by the year over year growth for all of our product categories,” said Dave Limp, Senior Vice President, Amazon Devices. “With a sub-$50 price point for one or $250 for a six-pack, we’ve reached a tipping point with Fire—it is our fastest-selling tablet ever. We’ve already built millions—and we’re ramping up production to build millions more.”

    There are stats about online shopping on Thanksgiving and Black Friday in general from a variety of sources here.

    Image via Amazon

  • A Timely Glimpse At Ecommerce Habits And Numbers

    A Timely Glimpse At Ecommerce Habits And Numbers

    It’s the time of year when people are using a lot of their hard-earned dollars to get things for the people they care about. In other words, it’s the best time of year for ecommerce businesses. Now that it’s the Tuesday after the big weekend, let’s check in and see how things have been going.

    What are your thoughts about performance from the weekend? Let us know in the comments.

    According to Custora, Thanksgiving saw a 12.5% increase in ecommerce revenue with a 10.8% increase in ecommerce orders. There was a 1.5% increase in average order value compared to last year, which the company considers an indication of a “less promotional, discount-driven” quarter.

    Mobile commerce was 39.3% of all online commerce, up from about a third (34.3%) on Thanksgiving 2014, it says, adding that 78.3% of mobile commerce on Thanksgiving was done on iPhones and iPads with Android accounting for 21.5% of mobile online orders placed.

    They also shared some stats for Cyber Monday, which was the biggest online commerce day in the U.S. ever, it says:

    – Strong growth: E-Commerce revenue was up 16.2% over Cyber Monday 2014

    – Orders grew 14.7% and Average Order Value (AOV) was up 1.3%, indicating a less promotion-driven Cyber Monday than last year

    – 26.9% of online sales were placed on mobile (phones + tablets), up from 23% on Cyber Monday 2014

    – Over three quarters of all mobile orders (75.6%) were made on Apple devices, while only 24.2% happened on Android devices

    – Email marketing was the primary channel driving online sales, accounting for 22.1% of transactions

    – Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest, etc. only drove 1.5% of sales

    For the whole weekend through Monday, Custora says, “Revenue growth over 2014 came in strong at 16.4%. The strong growth overall for the weekend was driven by mobile (Apple devices in particular), email marketing, and Google search.”

    This week, Google shared some of the biggest search trends for gifts:

    Monetate found mobile phone commerce traffic to be up 118% (up 86% on Android, 50% on iOS) but found add-to-cart rate on mobile to be down 23%. It also found that Add-to-cart rate was up nearly 1% driven by Twitter (up 56%), desktop (up 22%) and tablet (up 17%) and that online commerce traffic from Facebook was up 92%.

    For Black Friday, Monetate found that online spending was up 13% year over year.

    “Consumers averaged bigger online [orders]… on Thanksgiving than on Black Friday,” a spokesperson tells WebProNews. “While Black Friday conversion rates were down 10%, average order value was up 2% YoY. Average order value was up YoY on mobile phone (12%) and Facebook (10%), but down on Twitter (33%).”

    “Screen size mattered,” the spokesperson says. “Consumers used mobile phones to [look]…but spent the most on desktop and tablet. Desktop users spent the most on average ($169) followed by tablet ($163), Facebook ($138) mobile phone ($130). iOS users spent more on average ($156) than Android users ($132). The week high for average order value was $173 on Thanksgiving compared to $164 on Black Friday.”

    DemandWare shared some findings as well. According to that company Black Friday orders were 6.1 times higher than a non-peak period (4 weeks ago), which is a 40% increase over last year. Black Friday baskets created on phones more than doubled year-over-year, according to DemandWare, which also says that on Thanksgiving, phone traffic share began increasing from 5pm until midnight.

    The IAB released a new report finding that younger adults, ages 18 – 34, are more likely to favor smartphones for retail activities than any other age group.

    While overall, consumers are more likely to order something using a tablet (35%) than a smartphone (28%), this younger generation is more inclined to do so using their smartphones (43% vs. 35% on a tablet), a spokesperson for the IAB told WebProNews. Those 35-54 are more apt to use a tablet…and are more apt to get something on those devices (41% vs. 35% general population), they said.

    – 18-34 year olds are more likely to read a product review on their smartphones (44% vs. 32% general population) and less likely to do so on tablets (32%). They’re also inclined to check prices on a smartphone (42% vs. 33% general population) and are less likely to do so on a tablet (32%).

    – Those who are 35-54 are more prone to use tablets to read product reviews, locate stores, check store hours, and check product pricing (40% vs. 35% general population).

    – Adults ages 55-64 are more than twice as likely to get something on a tablet (34%) than on a smartphone (15%).

    – Consumers 65+ are more than twice as likely to get something on a tablet (26%) than on a smartphone (11%). They are also nearly twice as likely to read a product review on a tablet (31%) than on a smartphone (17%).

    For a look at the IAB’s full report, go here.

    Amazon had an all-time high weekend for its devices. While the company didn’t reveal any hard numbers, it says it sold “millions of devices” and 3x over last year.

    Groupon also had a good weekend.

    “Groupon’s North American billings were up 41% compared to last year, and customers…[got] 52% more Groupons over the four-day weekend than in 2014,” a spokesperson for the company said. “Like other e-commerce sites and retailers…[tangible] products led the weekend.”

    Groupon also saw a “tremendous appetite” for local experiences. CEO Rich Williams talks about the company’s weekend here.

    What didn’t have such a great weekend were Pinterest’s “buyable pins” and their counterparts from Facebook and Twitter. A report from Re/code says that one of Pinterest’s big launch partners for Buyable Pins has been seeing less than 10 transactions a day with the feature.

    Interestingly, Google just essentially turned Image Search into a Pinterest competitor, which could negatively impact Pinterest even more considering that Google search is already a primary place that people are looking for things to get.

    How is your business faring compared to last year? Discuss.

  • Google Reveals Gift Search Trends

    Google Reveals Gift Search Trends

    Last week, ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, Google shared a look at related trending searches. Now, with Black Friday over and half way into Cyber Monday, the company is giving us a look at trending gift searches.

    “If your holiday shopping plan this season involves grabbing a spare minute on your phone to hunt for presents while you’re standing in line or on the train to work, you’re not alone,” says Brad Johnsmeyer with Google Insights. “More than half of holiday shoppers say they plan to use their smartphones in free moments throughout the day to get their holiday list done. As we wake up to what has become the day for online deal hunting—Cyber Monday—we took a look at the top gifts trending on Google Search to help you shop smarter in those spare moments. Here’s a look at online shopping search trends across the U.S., to give you ideas of what your loved ones might like to find under the tree.”

    When it comes to toys, it’s drones that people seem to be most interested in.

    “Drones are no longer expensive playthings for the tech-savvy,” says Johnsmeyer. “Search for ‘toy drone’ and you’ll find countless inexpensive, easy-to-use devices available from department stores and toy stores. And they’re popular—nationwide, shopping searches for drones are up 80% over the past year, and they’re highest in California.”

    Here’s what the trends look like for apparel and electronics:

    Google recently redesigned Google Shopping to make finding things like this easier on mobile devices.

    Images via Google

  • Google Shares Thanksgiving Search Trends

    Google Shares Thanksgiving Search Trends

    As Thanksgiving approaches, Google is sharing some searches that have been trending throughout the United States leading up to the holiday.

    As of Wednesday, the top Thanksgiving questions were as follows:

    “Gratitude may be in the name, but food is the centerpiece of Thanksgiving,” says Google’s Emily Wood. “For weeks now people have been searching for recipes to wow their relatives this Thursday, from classics like cranberry relish and mashed potatoes to turkey alternatives like lasagna and beef stew.”

    Can’t say I saw Lasagna coming.

    “Even amongst regional variations, family eccentricities or that ambitious new recipe you clipped from a food magazine, there’s one dish that takes the casserole on Thanksgiving Day,” adds Wood. “Stuffing is the top searched Thanksgiving recipe in 49 out of 50 states, with only North Carolina standing up proud for sweet potatoes. Our take: Why not have both?”

    The top Thanksgiving recipe question on Google is “How to cook a turkey?” The most searched for methods have been roasting, followed by smoking and frying.

    Images via Google

  • Google Shares ‘Surprising’ Black Friday Findings

    Google Shares ‘Surprising’ Black Friday Findings

    Google is sharing some research it conducted about foot traffic patterns in stores across the United States during Black Friday last year. The company says it uncovered some “surprising” findings that should help businesses better connect with shoppers in and near their stores.

    “Contrary to the notion that most people head to stores in the morning, we found that Black Friday store traffic tends to peak in the afternoon, typically between 2-4 pm,” says Elizabeth Fabiani, Product Marketing Manager, Google Shopping. “Additionally, since some stores now open on Thanksgiving Day, we also saw an increase in foot traffic on Thursday evening. In fact, department stores now see their peak traffic on Thanksgiving evening between 6-7pm.”

    Google recommends allocating enough budget across campaigns to support the increase in traffic as shoppers to to stores. They say to consider increasing mobile bids during the afternoon when foot traffic is highest and using the mobile bid adjustment simulator tool to size the mobile opportunity and adjust bids.

    “For categories like electronics and cellphone stores, it should come as no surprise that Black Friday drives more foot traffic compared to any other weekend during the holiday season; in fact, store traffic is 2x higher in electronics stores and 1.6x higher in cellphone stores on Black Friday,” says Fabiani. “However, there are many stores that don’t see their biggest crowds on Black Friday. Shopping malls, superstores & discount stores, and department stores have the highest store traffic on the Saturday before Christmas, while dollar stores have the most foot traffic on Christmas Eve — perhaps due to last minute stocking stuffers.”

    Google suggests using location extension targeting to get shoppers who are close to your store to visit and adding this to local inventory ads.

    Google has a Holiday Shopping Readiness guide you may want to refer to for more best practices. They also recently put out some helpful videos about using Google Shopping for the holidays.

    Image via Google

  • 2 Million People Have Pinned Black Friday & Cyber Monday Content On Pinterest

    2 Million People Have Pinned Black Friday & Cyber Monday Content On Pinterest

    Well, it’s just about that time. The biggest shopping days of the year – Black Friday and Cyber Monday – are less than a week away (not to mention Small Business Saturday).

    Pinterest is sharing some statistics about how its users prepare for these events. Two million people have already saved pins about Black Friday and Cyber Monday, it says, adding that there’s been a 140% increase in pins about these days in the past year. 70% of holiday pins are related to fashion, home decor, quotes, and other products.

    “Pinners will shop more on Black Friday than the average online user,” Pinterest’s Liz Xiao says in a blog post. “Not only will Pinners shop more on Black Friday, they’ll also spend more than non-Pinners: 4x more on toys and games, 3x more on housewares and 3x more on clothing and accessories. That’s all from a November 2015 Civic Science survey.”

    “Pinners will shop across more types of stores, including small businesses,” she adds “People on Pinterest are twice as certain they’ll shop for the holidays compared to non-Pinners, and because of that, they’re confident they’ll be shopping at more stores. While Pinners will likely spend holiday dollars at Walmart and Target, according to the Civic Science survey, they’re 50% more likely to spend the most money at specialty stores and other local businesses.”

    32% of Pinterest users plan to shop for themselves only on Black Friday, Xiao says, citing data from a Competitive Futures report. Pinners, she says, are twice as likely to go on a clothing shopping spree compared to the general public.

    According to Pinterest, holiday pinning starts up to four months in advance of Christmas. Here’s a related infograpnic the company released a while back:

    Here are the most pinned products of the year according to Pinterest:

    1. A new wave water bottle
    2. A solar charger for your smartphone
    3. Lace-up boots to hit the pavement 
    4. Glow in the dark leggings take athleisure to a new level
    5. Asymmetrical coats
    6. Artful gemstones 
    7. A smarter way to pack your bag
    8. Stylish swaddle blankets
    9. Graphic tees and tops 
    10. Tapestries to transform your bedroom

    Images via Pinterest

  • Google Introduces Text Message Subscription Ads

    Google Introduces Text Message Subscription Ads

    Google is testing a new ad format that delivers brand offers and updates to consumers’ phones via text message. The company is enabling users to subscribe to a Google service that tailors promotional messages to products they’re interested in.

    Once the user subscribes, Google says their phone numbers will remain private and they’ll be able to opt out.

    Here’s what the ads and messages look like:

    “Let’s say, for example, that a consumer searches for ‘black friday deals’ and subscribes from the ad below,” says Google in a Google+ update. “They can now receive text messages from Google on their mobile device showcasing relevant offers from a variety of retailers. Consumers can choose from a variety of product categories including computers, phones and gaming consoles.”

    Users can also text JOIN to one of the following numbers to subscribe to deals:

    For Black Friday – 847-904-0608
    For Cyber Monday – 847-906-8958
    For Holiday deals – 847-904-0596

    Images via Google

  • Facebook And Instagram Stats To Consider This Holiday Season

    Facebook And Instagram Stats To Consider This Holiday Season

    Facebook is sharing some new research from FBIQ about how people are shopping online for the holidays these days. Naturally, they’re also reminding businesses that they have various ads and marketing tools that can help them take advantage of these habits.

    Do you expect Facebook and/or Instagram to play a significant role in your holiday efforts this year? What specific tools/features? Let us know in the comments.

    “Last year’s holiday season signaled a major shift in the way people shop,” a Facebook spokesperson tells WebProNews. “More people started their shopping online, even when intending to buy in store, and mobile traffic also rose. And this year, more people are shopping on mobile – nearly one-third of online transactions are on mobile and the percentage of online purchasers who buy on mobile will grow 30% by Q4 (as shared by FBIQ last week).”

    For reference, FBIQ released data on growth in engagement and purchase behavior via mobile devices. Some key takeaways from that were:

    – From January to May 2015, 3 in 10 online purchases took place on mobile and the frequency of mobile purchases increased 35%

    – Over the course of the year, those purchasing on a mobile device steadily increased and in Q4, Facebook IQ predicts that the percentage of online purchasers who buy on mobile will grow 30%

    – 73% of people say mobile devices are always with them

    – 45% of all shopping journeys contain an action on mobile—everything from discovering to researching to buying (57% for Millennials)

    – In the year ahead, 64% of omni-channel shoppers anticipate doing more research on their smartphones and 61% expect to be using their smartphone more while in physical stores

    More on that particular research here.

    “As people and businesses increasingly connect on mobile this holiday season, [we] wanted to recap the tools Facebook and Instagram have recently built out related to commerce and direct response that both allow brands to maximize mobile campaigns this holiday season and allow shoppers a personalized discovery experience – for reference Sheryl [Sandberg] called out the growing success of our commerce-related products leading into holiday during last week’s earnings call.”

    Facebook says its dynamic product ads allow brands to promote all of their products for the holidays with unique creative “efficiently at scale” without having to configure individual ads. The carousel format, it says, gives marketers more options for “compelling holiday storytelling” in News Feed. This now includes video in addition to images. The format drives 30 – 50 percent lower cost-per-conversion compared to single image link ads, according to the company.

    Facebook is also touting Instagram ads, which are now available to businesses globally and Facebook videos (which are seeing 8 billion daily views) as other helpful holiday marketing tools.

    To back up its claims, Facebook is sharing research about how people do their online holiday shopping. Stats include:

    – 37% plan to do most of their shopping before Black Friday

    – In the US and UK, 1 in 2 holiday shoppers plan to do most of their shopping before Black Friday

    – 53% plan to shop across channels

    – 40% plan to shop online more than last year

    – 44% of people say an activity or meal with a loved one is a gift they want, but only 34% plan to give that as a gift

    – 41% of people want the gift of travel, but only 15% plan to give the gift of travel

    – Last December, 73% of posts, photos, and videos were created on mobile

    – People share 28% more photos/videos on mobile during Holiday season vs. rest of the year

    – 63% of Instagrammers say they use Instagram to document their lives

    – 8 billion daily video views on Facebook, and the vast majority are on mobile

    – 74% of Millennials on Instagram take action based on posts

    – 2.7X more posts, photos and videos shared on mobile than desktop last December

    – Last year, 1 in 4 purchases were on mobile

    “People are shopping across more channels and devices more than ever before,” the spokesperson tells us. “Many shoppers are starting early — but many shoppers will also be on the hunt throughout the season.”

    “The opportunity for experiential gifting is on the rise—as illustrated by the gap between the experiences that many people hope to receive and what they are likely to receive this Holiday season,” they added. “Mobile has made the holiday celebration vastly more visual…Mobile is a constant companion throughout the Holidays—from discovery to consideration to action to shopping and sharing.”

    More in the following infographic:

    Do you expect to utilize Facebook’s offerings to drive sales this season? Discuss.

    Images via Facebook

  • Mobile And Reviews To Be Big Factors In Shopping This Season?

    Mobile And Reviews To Be Big Factors In Shopping This Season?

    Social Media Link released some interesting findings based on a survey of 21,000 active social media users. It finds that this holiday season, peer-to-peer online reviews will influence what goes on shoppers’ lists.

    How big of a role do reviews play in driving your sales? Discuss.

    83% of those polled said they discover new products on a monthly basis through social media before other sources while 67% said they always or often seek out family or close friends’ recommendations online while researching a purchase. Such recommendations have impact for 65%.

    Social Media Link CEO Susan Frech says, “Holiday shopping is trend-driven and last-minute. Consumers wait to learn what’s hot; then make their lists. This study suggests that they’re already discovering new products through the power of online reviews. That’s a game-changer.”

    According to the study, reviews on retailer websites, brand sites, and Facebook will impact customers’ choices more than reviews on other channels. It found that consumers trust these channels for computers, electronics, personal care items, children’s products, and apparel.

    “User-generated content, those testimonials, videos and reviews, are what is swaying consumers more than ever this year. Brands that focus on getting their messages out through their consumers, will win all along the path to purchase,” says Frech.

    The findings indicate that 18% find one online review to be enough to convince them to purchase as long as it is from a close friend, family member, or colleague. 23% say up to four from a variety of sources is enough to convince them.

    Facebook reviews are holding more sway than in previous years, and video reviews are gaining credibility among consumers. 6% say they use YouTube to learn about new products and brands. 49% say they use YouTube to gather information before making a purchase. Two-thirds use video reviews at least some of the time to help make a purchase decision.

    The source of the video matters though. Video reviews from YouTube reviewers and on Retail websites tied for influencing 64% while 50% have been influenced by a blogger videos.

    “While video reviews on YouTube certainly hold sway for consumers, it’s important to note that video on Facebook is gaining. I predict that by next holiday season year, we’ll see the balance of video reviewing tipping to Facebook,” said Frech.

    Interestingly, brand sponsored reviews are trusted, but the source is key.

    Facebook Insights (FBIQ) recently released some data on growth in engagement and purchase behavior via mobile devices. Long story short, mobile shopping is on the rise.

    Among the key findings:

    – From January to May 2015, 3 in 10 online purchases took place on mobile and the frequency of mobile purchases increased 35%

    – Over the course of the year, those purchasing on a mobile device steadily increased and in Q4, Facebook IQ predicts that the percentage of online purchasers who buy on mobile will grow 30%

    – 73% of people say mobile devices are always with them

    – 45% of all shopping journeys contain an action on mobile—everything from discovering to researching to buying (57% for Millennials)

    – In the year ahead, 64% of omni-channel shoppers anticipate doing more research on their smartphones and 61% expect to be using their smartphone more while in physical stores

    More on Facebook’s findings here.

    A new State of ecommerce benchmark report from Yotpo is making the rounds. According to that, social channels are only driving 6% of ecommerce traffic compared to Direct (40%), Search (34%), Referral (10%), Paid (5%), Email (3%) and Other (2%). It also shows, however, that social traffic is high quality with Instagram traffic leading for average time on site topping email, direct, and referral.

    Do you expect social media, reviews, and/or mobile to play a significant role in your holiday season success? Share your thoughts here.

  • Amazon Black Friday Deals Store Opens For Business

    Amazon Black Friday Deals Store Opens For Business

    Halloween is over and November has begun, so that can only mean one thing. Black Friday is getting closer, and Amazon has launched its Black Friday Deals Store and Electronics Holiday Gift Guide.

    “Shoppers come to Amazon to discover the best deals on the best gifts and this year, we’re pulling out all of the stops,” said Steve Shure, Vice President, Amazon Consumer Marketing. “We’re giving Prime members early access to more than 30,000 Lightning Deals and for all customers, tens of thousands of great deals in the Black Friday Deals store. With incredible deals, fast delivery options, curated lists like our Electronics Holiday Gift Guide, gift recommendations, customer reviews and more, we’re making it easier than ever for customers to save time and money on their holiday shopping.”

    Prime members get access to over 30,000 lightning deals 30 minutes before other shoppers. This includes early access to the following deals:

    – 30% off Sony XBR55X900C 55-Inch 4K Ultra HD TV with a Blu-ray Player

    – $170 off the Sony Alpha a6000 Mirrorless Digital Camera with 16-50mm Power Zoom Lens

    – 47% off Jaybird X Sport Bluetooth Headphones

    – Optima HD37 Full 3D 1080p 2600 Lumens DLP Home Cinema Projector for less than $800

    – 40% off select Frye shoes, handbags, accessories and luggage/travel for men and women

    – 40% off select toys from top construction brands including K’NEX, Tegu, and Magformer

    – Up to 50% off select Home Automation products

    – 20% or more off select Wilton and Pyrex bakeware products

    – Deals from top Kitchen brands including Rubbermaid, KitchenAid, Paderno, and Instant Pot

    – $10 off select $50 Black & Decker product purchases

    – Up to 50% off hundreds of PetSafe items

    The store will run through December 22. You can find it at Amazon.com/blackfriday.

    The Electronics Holiday Gift Guide has over 600 items organized by category and gift recipient.

  • Black Friday Emails, Social Posts Work Better Earlier In The Week

    Black Friday Emails, Social Posts Work Better Earlier In The Week

    Yesmail is sharing new data indicating that retailers benefit from sending Black Friday promotions earlier rather than the day of. The firm found that open rates of Black Friday-themed emails were highest on the Monday and Tuesday leading up to the day (15.66 and 15.43 percent respectively).

    Based on the data, it looks like Wednesday is by far the worst day for open rates.

    Screen Shot 2015-10-29 at 2.20.13 PM

    The majority (33%) of Black Friday messages were sent on Black Friday itself. Black Friday Facebook and Twitter posts also saw more engagement earlier in the week, Yesmail says.

    “Despite the months of planning that goes into Black Friday promotions, retailers’ email and social media marketing activities are falling behind,” a spokesperson told WebProNews.

    “When it comes to Black Friday, consumers are active on different channels at different times,” he study says. “As a result, retailers must continue to adjust their strategy to make sure they are hitting the right channels at the right time based on what has worked in the past. In addition, they must ensure they’re communicating the same information across each channel not only for brand consistency, but also for optimal customer experience – there is nothing more frustrating for a customer than seeing a promotion for 20% OFF on Twitter but realizing it’s actually 10% when he gets to a store.”

    You can find the full study here.

    Image via Yesmail

  • Google Shopping Guide To The Holidays In 3 Videos

    Well, it’s almost November, so if you haven’t started getting your holiday shopping campaigns ready, you better get your butt in gear. If you’re looking to reach shoppers through Google Shopping this holiday season, it’s a good time to take a look at some best practices.

    With that in mind, Google just released a trio of videos to give you a better handle on the best ways to manage your Shopping campaigns, get more of your products online, and optimize your campaigns.

    The first video walks you through “setting up realistic budgets and targets to maximize your reach on Google,” as the company puts it.

    The second discusses how to get your data feed into shape to show more products online so it’s easier for shoppers to find you.

    The third video goes over optimization fundamentals including how to drive traffic to your site and then optimize the traffic so you can improve your ROI.

    Google is advising advertisers to head to the Google Best Practices Help Center for more.

  • With Holidays Coming, It’s Time To Get Serious About Pinterest Marketing

    With Holidays Coming, It’s Time To Get Serious About Pinterest Marketing

    If you haven’t already started your holiday marketing or at least started planning it, you better get in gear, because it’s that time. Social media played a less significant role in holiday ecommerce last year than other channels like search and email, but things are evolving on the social commerce front, and technically, Pinterest is more about search than social anyway.

    Have you begun planning your holiday marketing attack yet? Let us know in the comments.

    Pinterest has been trying to recruit advertisers and get them to fork over part of their search budgets because the service is ultimately more about finding things than conversing with friends, even though Pinterest is widely considered a social media service.

    Last week, Pinterest revealed that it has over 100 million monthly active users and that the number of pinners doubled in the past 18 months. The number of searches increased 18% year over year.

    Usage is likely about to explode further given that the company just opened up its API to all developers enabling them to build countless new apps and integrations that utilize pins, boards, and Pinterest user profiles.

    “Earlier this year, we launched the Pinterest Developers Platform, a suite of endpoints for building apps and integrations that bring Pins to life and help people do more with their Pins,” a spokesperson for Pinterest tells us. “By opening the platform to further development and creativity, people will have more ways to take action with their Pins.”

    So far, developers have submitted over 5,000 ideas for apps and integrations, the company says. These include recipe recommendation apps, travel planning apps, gift registry integrations, publisher integrations, etc.

    Pinterest released some new stats surrounding how people use the service in relation to the holidays this week. According to the company, even though it’s not even October yet, millions of people have already started pinning content related to the winter holidays.

    “With 170 million holiday decor Pins (and 3 million ugly sweater Pins), Pinterest is the one-stop shop for holiday ideas big and small—and these numbers just keep growing,” says Pinterest’s Edwin Wong. “From 2013 to 2014, the number of holiday Pins grew by 50%.”

    “Don’t forget: Holidays on Pinterest aren’t just about tinsel and Santa hats, they’re also about shopping,” he adds. “It’s no secret that Pinners love to buy. 47% of Pinners start shopping for the holidays before Thanksgiving, according to Civic Science(That number’s only 39% for shoppers in general!).”

    Pinterest tells businesses to get your holidays off to a good start by: visiting your audience analytics to see what kinds of things your audience likes; creating seasonal content that “maps” to your audience’s interests; adding text overlay and descriptions to make pins more click-worthy, and of course using Promoted Pins.

    Since Pinterest released the above infographic and holiday stats, it has opened up its API to developers opening the floodgates for developers to build apps and integrations utilizing Pinterest, which should help boost numbers even more.

    The company’s CEO has also been speaking about how low the opt-out rate is for Promoted Pins. Something to think about.

    Do you intend to incorporate Pinterest into your marketing mix for the holidays? Let us know in the comments.

    Images via Pinterest

  • Facebook Gets Retailers Prepared For The Holidays

    Facebook Gets Retailers Prepared For The Holidays

    Facebook is advising retail marketers about how to prepare for the holiday season. Yes, it’s August, but according to the company, that means it’s time to start doing some serious planning.

    The company laid out eight tips for holiday advertising prep. In a nutshell, these include: refresh your audience profile; identify your key audience segments; add the Facebook pixel and SDK to your site and app; find your customer conversion path; optimize your mobile experience; divide your budget strategically; test creative and ad types; and prepare your catalog.

    Of course they elaborate on all of these in the post, saying that these things will help you maximize your advertising efforts on Facebook throughout throughout the holidays.

    “People may not be in holiday mode yet, but retail marketers should be,” Facebook says. “Why? Because successful holiday marketing starts with preparation in August and September. As you begin thinking about holiday advertising, keep in mind that this year people are expected to do more holiday shopping on mobile than ever. In fact, sixty-eight percent of UK shoppers use their mobile phone in store.1 People are also spending more time on Facebook and Instagram than any other digital media, and more than half of people in the US say Facebook is somewhat or very influential on their holiday shopping.”

    Facebook is offering retail marketers a free holiday guide here. It’s 18 pages, and is almost certainly worth a read in your near future.

    According to the National Retail Federation, retail holiday sales increased 4% last year.

    Image via Facebook

  • Study: Email Fatigue Not An Issue In Q4

    Study: Email Fatigue Not An Issue In Q4

    Return Path has a new study out looking at consumer email behavior in Q4 2014. Its main finding is that instead of experiencing “email fatigue” during the holiday season, consumers welcomed more messages from retailers. This “contradicts common theories about email overload,” a spokesperson for Return Path said.

    The study found that the average consumer inbox received fewer than ten messages a day between October and mid-November, and then about two more on peak days (like Black Friday and Cyber Monday). It also found that consumers read 22.4 percent of the messages they received during the holiday shopping season, which is close to their quarterly average of 22.8 percent.

    “While most marketing industry pundits praise the email channel for its exceptional ROI, few openly challenge the myth that consumers don’t like it or merely tolerate it. The data consistently refutes that view. When brands craft responsible, consumer-friendly email programs that comply with established best marketing practices, people read it, engage with it, and most importantly, actually like it,” said Return Path President George Bilbrey. “The data used here to track behavioral trends can also be used by individual brands to monitor their own subscribers’ levels of engagement, essentially to make sure that customers like the email they receive. That’s critical, and not just during holiday peaks; as this report shows, the battle for consumers’ attention in the inbox is an everyday challenge.”

    The spokesperson said, “Consumers also weren’t especially inclined to complain about shopping-related messages they received – email classified as ‘shopping’ received an average of 63 spam complaints per 10,000 messages, which is fewer than most commercial categories, such as travel, finance and news.”

    “While the average email account received 9-10 daily messages during Q4 2014, only 25 percent fell within that range, receiving 6 to 10,” they said.

    The study was based on a sample of anonymous, aggregated mailbox interactions of 2 million subscribers with 3.8 billion email messages received during the quarter. You can find the full report here.

    Images via Return Path

  • Email Won Thanksgiving Weekend [Report]

    Email Won Thanksgiving Weekend [Report]

    Email marketing and search (both organic and paid) were the dominant marketing channels over the holiday season according to new research from Custora. The firm released its new 2014 Holiday Recap.

    According to that, ecommerce revenue in the U.S. was up 15.6% compared to 2013’s holidays season. This continues a four-year streak of mid-teen growth.

    Black Friday and Cyber Monday were still the top two shopping days by far, and one out of four online purchases was done on a mobile device. Custora proclaims Black Friday was “Mobile Friday” as nearly a third of sales were done on phones and tablets.

    Custora found search to still be the primary way people find the products they want. 38.5% of online transactions during the season originated from a search query. 21% of orders were driven by organic search, while 17.5% were driven y paid search.

    It was also a good season for email.

    “Winning email marketing can mean winning Black Friday and Cyber Monday,” the report says. “Overall during the holiday period (November – December 2014), email marketing drove 17.7% of online orders, making it the third largest channel after organic (free) search (21%), and paid search (17.5%). During Thanksgiving weekend (the five days from Thanks-giving to Cyber Monday, including Black Friday) email was by far the primary marketing channel driving e-commerce orders, account-ing for 27.3% on Black Friday, 23.9% on Cyber Monday, and 23.1% during the Thanksgiving weekend overall.”

    “Email frequency and revenue contribution increased over the holidays,” it says. “Relevant email content & exciting offers actually drove unsubscribe rates down despite increased email volume.”

    Social media, including Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest, only drove 1.9% of all ecommerce orders. That’s actually slightly down from the 2013 holiday season when social media accounted for 2.3%.

    The report is based on data from over 100 US retailers, 100 million anonymized shoppers, and $40 billion in revenue. More on the report here.

    Image via Custora

  • Amazon: Prime And Free Shipping Saved People Over $2 Billion Over The Holidays

    Amazon: Prime And Free Shipping Saved People Over $2 Billion Over The Holidays

    This has been Amazon’s 20th holiday shopping season, if you can believe that. The company announced that it also saw record growth for Amazon Prime memberships. Over 10 million new members tried Prime for the first time, and Amazon’s Prime and Free Shipping offerings saved customers over $2 billion in shipping fees this holiday season, according to the company.

    “We are excited to welcome more than ten million new members to Amazon Prime this holiday season, who benefited from unlimited Free Two-Day Shipping on their holiday gifts. Prime members can also borrow more than 700,000 books, listen to one million songs and hundreds of playlists, save unlimited photos and watch tens of thousands of movies and TV episodes including the Golden Globe nominated show from Amazon Studios, Transparent,” said CEO Jeff Bezos. “We are working hard to make Prime even better and expanding the recently launched Prime Now to additional cities in 2015.”

    In case you missed it, Prime Now is a new delivery service, which the company launched in New York, enabling customers to get one-hour delivery. In terms of making Prime better, Amazon has certainly been focused on that a lot over the past year, frequently adding various perks.

    “Customers continue to save money shopping on Amazon,” said Jeff Wilke, Senior Vice President, Amazon.com. “This holiday season, Amazon shoppers saved billions through free shipping, and even more through our low prices. We are especially excited that 10 million new customers tried Amazon Prime for the first time.”

    Amazon shipped to 185 countries this holiday season. About 60% of customers used a mobile device, with more turning to mobile the closer to the holidays it got.

    Image via Amazon

  • ‘Tis The Season For An Animated Google Doodle

    Google is showing a doodle on its homepage today, honoring the holiday spirit, showing a reindeer pulling some children in a sleigh. They didn’t get too creative with the Google letters this time, instead opting for a simple red banner with the word Google at the top. It’s animated:

    When you click the Doodle, it takes you to search results for “‘Tis the season!” According to the first result, which is from Wikipedia, ‘​Tis the Season may refer to the lyrics from the carol “Deck the Halls” or ‘​Tis the Season, a Vince Gill and Olivia Newton-John album. I like to think Google is honoring the latter.

    Speaking of Google and lyrics, did you know that Google is now showing song lyrics directly on search results pages, and linking them to Google Play, where you can buy the song you’re searching for? It’s probably not the Christmas present owners of lyrics sites were hoping to get this year. Google isn’t doing this for Deck the Halls lyrics at least.

    Today’s doodle is the first in a series of holiday doodles this week. Here’s what tomorrows will look like:

    Images via Google